Kep Travel Guide
The sleepy seaside town of Kep wasn’t always so sleepy. Before Pol Pot and the Khmer Rouge kicked everybody out, this was Cambodias major tourist destination. Evidence of this can be seen everywhere, from the hollowed out remains of what were once lavish beach resorts to the overgrown tennis courts. This was once the beach getaway for Cambodia’s elite and after experiencing a long period of decline, Kep is staging a gradual comeback, though not so much for its beaches – which are not a patch on Sihanoukville’s – as its seafood. In particular, the fresh crab has Khmers day-tripping here by the taxi load. Mostly visited by local tourists for now, people typically float offshore in car-tyres, hire boats to visit an array of offshore islands and eat. They also eat, and eat. And drink.
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Krong Koh Kong Travel Guide
Krong Koh Kong is a coastal village in the south-west corner of Cambodia. To the north are the Cardaman mountains. The island is only 80 km away from Thailand's island Koh chang. This part of Cambodia is still relatively undeveloped for tourism but the potential is enormous. Koh Kong Island of the coast is a undiscovered paradise and the Government of Cambodia hope to build infrastructure to attract overseas tourists in the future. There are flights from Phnom penh and boats from Kampong Cham Som.
Cambodia
Cambodia is one of the least known and traveled to destinations in the South East Asia due to its shaky political and economical situation. Cambodia borders on by Thailand, Lao and Vietnam, but it's rough travel to go overland between these countries. The most comfortable way to travel to Cambodia it to fly directly to it's capital Phnom Penh. Much of Cambodia is relatively flat with vast tracts of land given over to rice production. Other areas of Cambodia are mountainous, including the Dangrek, Cardomen and the Elephant mountain ranges. Cambodia has places of interest all over the country but
Choeung Ek Travel Guide
Choeung Ek, the site of a former orchard about 17km south of Phnom Penh, Cambodia, is the best-known of the sites known as The Killing Fields, where the Khmer Rouge regime executed about 17,000 people between 1975 and 1979. Mass graves containing more than 8,000 bodies were discovered at Choeung Ek after the fall of the Khmer Rouge regime. It was a very disturbing place that shows the horror and yet commemorated those killed.
Today, Choeung Ek is a memorial, marked by a Buddhist stupa. The stupa has plexiglass sides and is filled with more than 5,000 human
Kampong Cham Travel Guide
Kampong Cham is a province in the east of Cambodia. Its capital is Kampong Cham. Kampong Cham is a port city on the banks of the Mekong River about 50 kilometres north of Phnom penh. Close to the town is the temple complex of Wat Nokor, a well preserved example of 13th century Khmer architecture.
The province is subdivided into 16 districts.
0301 Batheay
0302 Chamkar Leu
0303 Cheung Prey
0304 Dambae
0305 Kampong Cham
0306 Kampong Siem
0307 Kang Meas
0308 Kaoh Soutin
0309 Krouch Chhmar
0310 Memot
0311 Ou Reang Ov
0312 Ponhea Kraek
0313 Prey Chhor
0314 Srei Santhor
0315 Stueng Trang
0316 Tboung Khmum
Surin
Surin's heritage is linked to elephants, silk and the ruins of a Khmer empire. Suay, a tribe of elephant catchers, were domiciled in the forested mountains of this province bordering on Cambodia. Surin is 457 kilometers far from Bangkok by car and 420 kilometers by train, and is 194 kilometers far from Nakhon Ratchasima by car and 170 kilometers by train.
Surin covers a total area of 8,124 square kilometers and is divided into 13 Amphoes (districts), 3 king Amphoes (Sub districts). The province is separated from neighboring Cambodia by the Banthat Mountains. During the 1970s, the period of Khmer Rouge